The inhabitants of the International Space Station and other space stations live in the thermosphere. They are not directly in the thermosphere, of course. They must be inside the station or inside a space suit at all times. Maybe some day you will join them!

Thermosphere

The
thermosphere
is the layer above the mesosphere. It rises to 600 kilometers (372 miles) above the surface. The International Space Station and other space stations orbit Earth in this layer.

Temperature increases with altitude in the thermosphere. Surprisingly, it may be higher than 1000° C (1800° F) near the top of this layer! The sun’s energy there is very strong. The molecules absorb the sun's energy and are heated up. But there are so few gas molecules that the air still feels very cold. Molecules in the thermosphere gain or lose electrons. They then become charged particles called ions.

Magnetosphere

Earth's
magnetosphere
is controlled by the magnetic field. The magnetosphere protects the planet from the
solar wind
. The solar wind is ions that fly from the Sun to Earth very fast. The magnetosphere protects Earth's ozone layer. So life on Earth needs the protection of the magnetosphere.

Northern and Southern Lights

Have you ever seen a brilliant light show in the night sky? Sometimes the ions in the thermosphere glow at night. Storms on the sun energize the ions and make them light up. In the Northern Hemisphere, the lights are called the northern lights, or aurora borealis. In the Southern Hemisphere, they are called southern lights, or aurora australis. They are referred to together as the
aurora
(
Figure
below
and
Figure
below
).

The aurora as seen from the northern hemisphere, known as the Aurora Borealis.

Exosphere

The
exosphere
is the layer above the thermosphere. This is the top of the atmosphere. The exosphere has no real upper limit; it just gradually merges with outer space. Gas molecules are very far apart in this layer, but they are really hot. Earth’s gravity is so weak in the exosphere that gas molecules sometimes just float off into space.

Vocabulary

aurora
: Spectacular light display that occurs near the poles; the aurora is in the thermosphere.